Hi all,
(2012/03/07 3:39), Tom Lane wrote:
A bigger issue with postgresql_fdw_validator is that it supposes that
the core backend is authoritative as to what options libpq supports,
which is bad design on its face. It would be much more sensible for
dblink to be asking libpq what options
2012/4/9 Shigeru HANADA shigeru.han...@gmail.com:
1) connect to the server at the beginning of the local query
2) execute EXPLAIN for foreign table foo
3) execute EXPLAIN for foreign table bar
4) execute actual query for foreign table foo
5) execute actual query for foreign
(2012/04/08 5:19), Thom Brown wrote:
2012/4/7 Shigeru HANADAshigeru.han...@gmail.com:
I've updated pgsql_fdw so that it can collect statistics from foreign
data with new FDW API.
I notice that if you restart the remote server, the connection is
broken, but the client doesn't notice this
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2012/4/7 Shigeru HANADA shigeru.han...@gmail.com:
I've updated pgsql_fdw so that it can collect statistics from foreign
data with new FDW API.
I notice that if you restart the remote server, the connection is
broken, but the client doesn't notice this until it goes to fire off
another command.
(2012/04/06 1:29), Tom Lane wrote:
Albe Laurenzlaurenz.a...@wien.gv.at writes:
Maybe the FDW API could be extended so that foreign data wrappers
can provide a random sample to avoid a full table scan.
The one thing that seems pretty clear from this discussion is that one
size doesn't fit
Excuse me for cutting in,
2012/4/6 Shigeru HANADA shigeru.han...@gmail.com:
To support foreign-table ANALYZE by adding a new hook, we would need a
mechanism (or at least documented guide lines) to manage the chain of
hook functions, because such hook might be used by multiple FDWs (or
other
Shigeru HANADA shigeru.han...@gmail.com writes:
(2012/04/06 1:29), Tom Lane wrote:
The one thing that seems pretty clear from this discussion is that one
size doesn't fit all. I think we really ought to provide a hook so that
the FDW can determine whether ANALYZE applies to its foreign tables
On Fri, Apr 6, 2012 at 11:20 PM, Tom Lane t...@sss.pgh.pa.us wrote:
Another concern is the place where we hook the process of ANALYZE. IOW,
how much portion of ANALYZE should be overridable?
Not much, IMO. The FDW should be able to decide whether or not to
analyze a particular table, and it
Shigeru Hanada shigeru.han...@gmail.com writes:
On Fri, Apr 6, 2012 at 11:20 PM, Tom Lane t...@sss.pgh.pa.us wrote:
In
particular I do not like the specific way it's done in the v7 patch
(I've not looked at v8 yet) because the interposed logic has a
hard-wired assumption that foreign tables
At 22:11 12/03/28 +0900, Shigeru HANADA wrote:
ANALYZE support for foreign tables is proposed by Fujita-san in current
CF, so I'd like to push it.
I updated the patch to the latest HEAD. Please find attached a patch.
Best regards,
Etsuro Fujita
postgresql-analyze-v7.patch
Description:
05, 2012 9:36 PM
To: Shigeru HANADA; Albe Laurenz
Cc: Tom Lane; Kevin Grittner; Robert Haas; PostgreSQL-development; Kohei
KaiGai; Martijn van Oosterhout; Hitoshi Harada
Subject: Re: [HACKERS] pgsql_fdw, FDW for PostgreSQL server
At 22:11 12/03/28 +0900, Shigeru HANADA wrote:
ANALYZE support
Albe Laurenz laurenz.a...@wien.gv.at writes:
I think that the price of a remote table scan is something
we should be willing to pay for good local statistics.
And there is always the option not to analyze the foreign
table if you are not willing to pay that price.
Maybe the FDW API could be
Shigeru HANADA wrote:
During a foreign scan, type input functions are used to convert
the text representation of values. If a foreign table is
misconfigured,
you can get error messages from these functions, like:
ERROR: invalid input syntax for type double precision: etwas
or
ERROR:
Shigeru HANADA wrote:
Attached are latest version of pgsql_fdw patches. Note that
pgsql_fdw_analyze.patch is only for test the effect of local
statistics.
Please apply patches in the order below:
(1) pgsql_fdw_v18.patch
(2) pgsql_fdw_pushdown_v11.patch
(3) pgsql_fdw_analyze.patch (if you
I wrote:
How about getting # of rows estimate by executing EXPLAIN for
fully-fledged remote query (IOW, contains pushed-down WHERE clause),
and
estimate selectivity of local filter on the basis of the statistics
which are generated by FDW via do_analyze_rel() and FDW-specific
sampling
2012/3/28 Shigeru HANADA shigeru.han...@gmail.com:
(2012/03/27 20:32), Thom Brown wrote:
2012/3/26 Shigeru HANADAshigeru.han...@gmail.com:
* pgsql_fdw_v17.patch
- Adds pgsql_fdw as contrib module
* pgsql_fdw_pushdown_v10.patch
- Adds WHERE push down capability to pgsql_fdw
*
On 28 March 2012 08:13, Thom Brown t...@linux.com wrote:
2012/3/28 Shigeru HANADA shigeru.han...@gmail.com:
(2012/03/27 20:32), Thom Brown wrote:
2012/3/26 Shigeru HANADAshigeru.han...@gmail.com:
* pgsql_fdw_v17.patch
- Adds pgsql_fdw as contrib module
* pgsql_fdw_pushdown_v10.patch
On 28 March 2012 08:39, Thom Brown t...@linux.com wrote:
On 28 March 2012 08:13, Thom Brown t...@linux.com wrote:
2012/3/28 Shigeru HANADA shigeru.han...@gmail.com:
(2012/03/27 20:32), Thom Brown wrote:
2012/3/26 Shigeru HANADAshigeru.han...@gmail.com:
* pgsql_fdw_v17.patch
- Adds
(2012/03/28 16:18), Albe Laurenz wrote:
I wrote:
How about getting # of rows estimate by executing EXPLAIN for
fully-fledged remote query (IOW, contains pushed-down WHERE clause),
and
estimate selectivity of local filter on the basis of the statistics
which are generated by FDW via
(2012/03/28 21:07), Albe Laurenz wrote:
I found another limitation of this approach:
pgsql_fdw_analyze() has to run as a user who can update
pg_statistic, and this user needs a user mapping to a remote
user who can read pg_statistic.
This is not necessary for normal operation and needs
to
Shigeru HANADA wrote:
I've implemented pgsql_fdw's own deparser and enhanced some features
since last post. Please apply attached patches in the order below:
Changes from previous version
=
1) Don't use remote EXPLAIN for cost/rows estimation, so now planner
Thanks for the comments.
(2012/03/27 18:36), Albe Laurenz wrote:
2) Defer planning stuffs as long as possible to clarify the role of
each
function. Currently GetRelSize just estimates result rows from local
statistics, and GetPaths adds only one path which represents SeqScan
on
remote
2012/3/26 Shigeru HANADA shigeru.han...@gmail.com:
(2012/03/15 23:06), Shigeru HANADA wrote:
Although the patches are still WIP, especially in WHERE push-down part,
but I'd like to post them so that I can get feedback of the design as
soon as possible.
I've implemented pgsql_fdw's own
Shigeru HANADA wrote:
My gut feeling is that planning should be done by the server which
will execute the query.
Agreed, if selectivity of both local filtering and remote filtering
were
available, we can estimate result rows correctly and choose better
plan.
How about getting # of rows
(2012/03/27 20:32), Thom Brown wrote:
2012/3/26 Shigeru HANADAshigeru.han...@gmail.com:
* pgsql_fdw_v17.patch
- Adds pgsql_fdw as contrib module
* pgsql_fdw_pushdown_v10.patch
- Adds WHERE push down capability to pgsql_fdw
* pgsql_fdw_analyze_v1.patch
- Adds pgsql_fdw_analyze
(2012/03/12 13:04), Etsuro Fujita wrote:
(2012/03/09 23:48), Tom Lane wrote:
Etsuro Fujitafujita.ets...@lab.ntt.co.jp writes:
2. IMHO RelOptInfo.fdw_private seems confusing. How about renaming it
to e.g., RelOptInfo.fdw_state?
Why is that better? It seems just as open to confusion with
Tom Lane wrote:
Shigeru Hanada shigeru.han...@gmail.com writes:
Thanks for the review. Agreed to write own depraser for pgsql_fdw
which handles nodes which can be pushed down. Every SQL-based FDW
which constructs SQL statement for each local query would need such
module inside.
Yeah.
(2012/03/09 23:48), Tom Lane wrote:
Etsuro Fujitafujita.ets...@lab.ntt.co.jp writes:
Thank you for your answer.
1. FilefdwPlanState.pages and FileFdwPlanState.ntuples seems redundant.
Why not use RelOptInfo.pages and RelOptInfo.tuples?
I intentionally avoided setting RelOptInfo.pages
Shigeru Hanada shigeru.han...@gmail.com writes:
I've not read whole of the patch yet, but I have basic questions.
1) IIUC, GetForeignRelSize should set baserel-rows to the number of
rows the ForeignScan node returns to upper node, but not the number
of rows FDW returns to core executor,
Shigeru Hanada shigeru.han...@gmail.com writes:
Thanks for the review. Agreed to write own depraser for pgsql_fdw
which handles nodes which can be pushed down. Every SQL-based FDW
which constructs SQL statement for each local query would need such
module inside.
Yeah. That's kind of
On Sat, Mar 10, 2012 at 11:38:51AM -0500, Tom Lane wrote:
Shigeru Hanada shigeru.han...@gmail.com writes:
Thanks for the review. Agreed to write own depraser for pgsql_fdw
which handles nodes which can be pushed down. Every SQL-based FDW
which constructs SQL statement for each local query
(2012/03/09 14:00), Tom Lane wrote:
I wrote:
There are a couple of other points that make me think we need to revisit
the PlanForeignScan API definition some more, too. ...
So we need to break down what PlanForeignScan currently does into three
separate steps. The first idea that comes to
Etsuro Fujita fujita.ets...@lab.ntt.co.jp writes:
(2012/03/09 14:00), Tom Lane wrote:
Attached is a draft patch for that.
1. FilefdwPlanState.pages and FileFdwPlanState.ntuples seems redundant.
Why not use RelOptInfo.pages and RelOptInfo.tuples?
I intentionally avoided setting
I've not read whole of the patch yet, but I have basic questions.
1) IIUC, GetForeignRelSize should set baserel-rows to the number of
rows the ForeignScan node returns to upper node, but not the number
of rows FDW returns to core executor, right?
BTW, once Fujita-san's ANALYZE support patch is
(2012/03/09 1:18), Tom Lane wrote:
I've been looking at this patch a little bit over the past day or so.
I'm pretty unhappy with deparse.c --- it seems like a real kluge,
inefficient and full of corner-case bugs. After some thought I believe
that you're ultimately going to have to abandon
(2012/03/06 23:47), Albe Laurenz wrote:
Shigeru Hanada wrote:
Connection should be closed only when the trigger is a
top level transaction and it's aborting, but isTopLevel flag was not
checked. I fixed the bug and added regression tests for such cases.
I wondered about that
Shigeru Hanada shigeru.han...@gmail.com writes:
[ pgsql_fdw_v15.patch ]
I've been looking at this patch a little bit over the past day or so.
I'm pretty unhappy with deparse.c --- it seems like a real kluge,
inefficient and full of corner-case bugs. After some thought I believe
that you're
I wrote:
There are a couple of other points that make me think we need to revisit
the PlanForeignScan API definition some more, too. ...
So we need to break down what PlanForeignScan currently does into three
separate steps. The first idea that comes to mind is to call them
On tis, 2012-03-06 at 13:39 -0500, Tom Lane wrote:
A bigger issue with postgresql_fdw_validator is that it supposes that
the core backend is authoritative as to what options libpq supports,
which is bad design on its face. It would be much more sensible for
dblink to be asking libpq what
Shigeru Hanada shigeru.han...@gmail.com writes:
Agreed. Attached fdw_helper patch doesn't contain GetFdwOptionValue()
any more, and pgsql_fdw patch accesses only necessary catalogs.
I've committed the fdw_helper part of this, with some very minor
improvements.
regards,
Shigeru Hanada wrote:
[pgsql_fdw_v12.patch]
I know this is not the latest version, but I played around with it and
tickled a bug.
It seems to have a problem with rolled back subtransactions.
test= \d+ remote
Foreign table laurenz.remote
Column | Type | Modifiers |
(2012/03/06 6:19), Tom Lane wrote:
I've committed the PlanForeignScan API change, with that change and
some other minor editorialization. The pgsql_fdw patch now needs an
update, so I set it back to Waiting On Author state.
Thanks.
I've revised pgsql_fdw to catch up to this change, but I'll
Shigeru Hanada wrote:
Connection should be closed only when the trigger is a
top level transaction and it's aborting, but isTopLevel flag was not
checked. I fixed the bug and added regression tests for such cases.
I wondered about that - is it really necessary to close the
Peter Eisentraut pete...@gmx.net writes:
On tor, 2012-03-01 at 20:56 +0900, Shigeru Hanada wrote:
How about moving postgresql_fdw_validator into dblink,
That's probably a good move. If this were C++, we might try to subclass
this whole thing a bit, to avoid code duplication, but I don't see
Shigeru Hanada shigeru.han...@gmail.com writes:
Attached patches also contains changes to catch up to the redesign of
PlanForeignScan.
I started to look at this patch, which soon led me back to the
prerequisite patch fdw_helper_v5.patch (that is the last version you
posted of that one, right?).
(2012/02/21 20:25), Etsuro Fujita wrote:
Please find attached an updated version of the patch.
This v2 patch can be applied on HEAD cleanly. Compile completed with
only one expected warning of scan.c, and all regression tests for both
core and contrib modules passed.
This patch allows FDWs to
(2012/03/05 18:21), Shigeru Hanada wrote:
(2012/02/21 20:25), Etsuro Fujita wrote:
Please find attached an updated version of the patch.
This v2 patch can be applied on HEAD cleanly. Compile completed with
only one expected warning of scan.c, and all regression tests for both
core and
(2012/03/05 21:00), Etsuro Fujita wrote:
(2012/03/05 18:21), Shigeru Hanada wrote:
(2012/02/21 20:25), Etsuro Fujita wrote:
Please find attached an updated version of the patch.
This v2 patch can be applied on HEAD cleanly. Compile completed with
only one expected warning of scan.c, and all
(2012/03/05 21:05), Etsuro Fujita wrote:
(2012/03/05 21:00), Etsuro Fujita wrote:
create_index_path builds multiple index paths for a plain relation. How
about renaming the function to create_foreign_paths?
I meant create_foreignscan_paths. I'm sorry about that.
Perhaps you are confusing
Shigeru Hanada shigeru.han...@gmail.com writes:
So, just renaming create_foreignscan_path to plural form seems missing
the point.
I agree that that wouldn't be an improvement. What bothers me about the
patch's version of this function is that it just creates a content-free
Path node and leaves
I wrote:
I'm inclined to think that if we provide this function in core at all,
it should take a parameter list long enough to let it fill in the Path
completely. That would imply that any future changes in Path structs
would result in a change in the parameter list, which would break
(2012/03/01 0:33), Tom Lane wrote:
I don't think that creating such a dependency is acceptable.
Even if we didn't mind the dependency, you said yourself that
contrib/postgresql_fdw's validator will accept stuff that's not
appropriate for dblink.
Agreed. I think that these two contrib modules
On tor, 2012-03-01 at 20:56 +0900, Shigeru Hanada wrote:
How about moving postgresql_fdw_validator into dblink,
That's probably a good move. If this were C++, we might try to subclass
this whole thing a bit, to avoid code duplication, but I don't see an
easy way to do that here.
with
2012/3/2 Peter Eisentraut pete...@gmx.net:
with renaming to dblink_fdw_validator?
Well, it's not the validator of the dblink_fdw, so maybe something like
basic_postgresql_fdw_validator.
-1 for same reason. It's not the validator of basic_postgresql_fdw.
Using fdw in the name of validator
(2012/02/29 4:07), Peter Eisentraut wrote:
Let's at least be clear about the reasons here. The fact that
postgresql_fdw_validator exists means (a) there is a possible naming
conflict that has not been discussed yet, and/or (b) the name is already
settled and we need to think of a way to make
2012/2/29 Shigeru Hanada shigeru.han...@gmail.com:
(2012/02/29 4:07), Peter Eisentraut wrote:
Let's at least be clear about the reasons here. The fact that
postgresql_fdw_validator exists means (a) there is a possible naming
conflict that has not been discussed yet, and/or (b) the name is
Shigeru Hanada shigeru.han...@gmail.com writes:
How about removing postgresql_fdw_validator from backend binary, and
changing dblink to use contrib/postgresql_fdw's validator? It breaks
some backward compatibility and requires contrib/postgresql_fdw to be
installed before using contrib/dblink
On Fri, Feb 24, 2012 at 5:31 PM, Peter Eisentraut pete...@gmx.net wrote:
Could we name this postgresql_fdw instead? We already have several
${productname}_fdw out there, and I don't want to get in the business of
having to guess variant spellings.
If you don't like variant spellings, having
Robert Haas robertmh...@gmail.com writes:
On Fri, Feb 24, 2012 at 5:31 PM, Peter Eisentraut pete...@gmx.net wrote:
Could we name this postgresql_fdw instead? We already have several
${productname}_fdw out there, and I don't want to get in the business of
having to guess variant spellings.
On Tue, Feb 28, 2012 at 11:02 AM, Tom Lane t...@sss.pgh.pa.us wrote:
Robert Haas robertmh...@gmail.com writes:
On Fri, Feb 24, 2012 at 5:31 PM, Peter Eisentraut pete...@gmx.net wrote:
Could we name this postgresql_fdw instead? We already have several
${productname}_fdw out there, and I don't
On tis, 2012-02-28 at 11:20 -0500, Robert Haas wrote:
[ snicker ] But still, Peter has a point: pgsql is not a name for
the
product, it's at best an abbreviation. We aren't calling the other
thing orcl_fdw or ora_fdw.
I think either postgres_fdw or postgresql_fdw would be fine.
I
On Feb 28, 2012, at 8:20 AM, Robert Haas wrote:
I liked the shorter name, myself, but I'm not going to make a big deal about
it.
pg_ is used quite a bit. what about pg_fdw?
David
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(2012/02/25 7:31), Peter Eisentraut wrote:
Could we name this postgresql_fdw instead? We already have several
${productname}_fdw out there, and I don't want to get in the business of
having to guess variant spellings.
I worry name conflict with existing postgresql_fdw_validator, which is
Could we name this postgresql_fdw instead? We already have several
${productname}_fdw out there, and I don't want to get in the business of
having to guess variant spellings.
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(2012/02/15 20:50), Etsuro Fujita wrote:
(2012/02/14 23:50), Tom Lane wrote:
(2012/02/14 17:40), Etsuro Fujita wrote:
As discussed at
that thread, it would have to change the PlanForeignScan API to let the
FDW generate multiple paths and dump them all to add_path instead of
returning a
I wrote:
Shigeru Hanada wrote:
- Since a rescan is done by rewinding the cursor, is it necessary
to have any other remote isolation level than READ COMMITED?
There is only one query issued per transaction.
If multiple foreign tables on a foreign server is used in a local
query,
Albe Laurenz laurenz.a...@wien.gv.at wrote:
If your query involves foreign scans on two foreign tables on the
same foreign server, these should always see the same snapshot,
because that's how it works with two scans in one query on local
tables.
That makes sense.
So I think it should
Kevin Grittner wrote:
If your query involves foreign scans on two foreign tables on the
same foreign server, these should always see the same snapshot,
because that's how it works with two scans in one query on local
tables.
That makes sense.
So I think it should be REPEATABLE READ
Albe Laurenz laurenz.a...@wien.gv.at wrote:
I read the example carefully, and it seems to me that it is
necessary for the read-only transaction (T3) to be SERIALIZABLE so
that T1 is aborted and the state that T3 saw remains valid.
Correct.
If I understand right, I agree with your
2012/02/21 0:58 Kevin Grittner kevin.gritt...@wicourts.gov:
Albe Laurenz laurenz.a...@wien.gv.at wrote:
I read the example carefully, and it seems to me that it is
necessary for the read-only transaction (T3)v to be SERIALIZABLE so
that T1 is aborted and the state that T3 saw remains
2012年2月17日6:08 Shigeru Hanada shigeru.han...@gmail.com:
(2012/02/17 2:02), Kohei KaiGai wrote:
I found a strange behavior with v10. Is it available to reproduce?
snip
I tried to raise an error on remote side.
postgres=# select * FROM ftbl WHERE 100 / (a - 3) 0;
The connection to the
Shigeru Hanada wrote:
- Since a rescan is done by rewinding the cursor, is it necessary
to have any other remote isolation level than READ COMMITED?
There is only one query issued per transaction.
If multiple foreign tables on a foreign server is used in a local
query,
multiple
Shigeru Hanada wrote:
Thanks for the review. Attached patches are revised version, though
only fdw_helper_v5.patch is unchanged.
Two questions:
- Is it on purpose that you can specify all SSL client options
except sslcompression?
- Since a rescan is done by rewinding the cursor, is it
I found a strange behavior with v10. Is it available to reproduce?
In case of ftbl is declared as follows:
postgres=# select * FROM ftbl;
a | b
---+-
1 | aaa
2 | bbb
3 | ccc
4 | ddd
5 | eee
(5 rows)
I tried to raise an error on remote side.
postgres=# select *
2012年2月16日13:41 Shigeru Hanada shigeru.han...@gmail.com:
Kaigai-san,
Thanks for the review. Attached patches are revised version, though
only fdw_helper_v5.patch is unchanged.
(2012/02/16 0:09), Kohei KaiGai wrote:
[memory context of tuple store]
It calls tuplestore_begin_heap() under the
(2012/02/17 0:15), Albe Laurenz wrote:
Shigeru Hanada wrote:
Thanks for the review. Attached patches are revised version, though
only fdw_helper_v5.patch is unchanged.
Two questions:
- Is it on purpose that you can specify all SSL client options
except sslcompression?
No, just an
(2012/02/14 23:50), Tom Lane wrote:
Shigeru Hanadashigeru.han...@gmail.com writes:
(2012/02/14 17:40), Etsuro Fujita wrote:
As discussed at
that thread, it would have to change the PlanForeignScan API to let the
FDW generate multiple paths and dump them all to add_path instead of
returning
Harada-san,
I checked the v9 patch, however, it still has some uncertain implementation.
[memory context of tuple store]
It calls tuplestore_begin_heap() under the memory context of
festate-scan_cxt at pgsqlBeginForeignScan.
On the other hand, tuplestore_gettupleslot() is called under the
memory
(2012/02/14 15:15), Shigeru Hanada wrote:
(2012/02/13 20:50), Etsuro Fujita wrote:
The patches have been applied, but role-related regression tests failed
in my environment. I fixed it in a similar fashion of
/src/test/regress/sql/foreign_data.sql. Please find attached a updated
patch for
(2012/02/14 17:40), Etsuro Fujita wrote:
OK. But my question was about the PlanForeignScan API.
Sorry for misunderstanding. :(
As discussed at
that thread, it would have to change the PlanForeignScan API to let the
FDW generate
(2012/02/14 19:42), Shigeru Hanada wrote:
(2012/02/14 17:40), Etsuro Fujita wrote:
As discussed at
that thread, it would have to change the PlanForeignScan API to let the
FDW generate multiple paths and dump them all to add_path instead
Shigeru Hanada shigeru.han...@gmail.com writes:
(2012/02/14 17:40), Etsuro Fujita wrote:
As discussed at
that thread, it would have to change the PlanForeignScan API to let the
FDW generate multiple paths and dump them all to add_path instead of
returning a FdwPlan struct.
Multiple valuable
(2012/02/10 20:39), Shigeru Hanada wrote:
(2012/02/08 20:51), Shigeru Hanada wrote:
Attached revised patches. Changes from last version are below.
snip
I've found and fixed a bug which generates wrong remote query when any
column of a foreign table has been dropped. Also regression test
(2012/02/13 20:50), Etsuro Fujita wrote:
The patches have been applied, but role-related regression tests failed
in my environment. I fixed it in a similar fashion of
/src/test/regress/sql/foreign_data.sql. Please find attached a updated
patch for the regression tests.
Good catch, thanks.
(2012/02/02 18:24), Marko Kreen wrote:
I think you want this instead:
https://commitfest.postgresql.org/action/patch_view?id=769
With modified version of pgsql_fdw which uses row processor to retrieve
result tuples, I found significant performance gain on simple read-only
pgbench, though
Thanks for the comments!
(2012/02/06 5:08), Kohei KaiGai wrote:
Yes. In my opinion, one significant benefit of pgsql_fdw is to execute
qualifiers on the distributed nodes; that enables to utilize multiple
CPU resources efficiently.
Duplicate checks are reliable way to keep invisible tuples
2012年2月1日12:15 Shigeru Hanada shigeru.han...@gmail.com:
(2012/01/30 4:39), Kohei KaiGai wrote:
I checked the fdw_helper_funcs_v3.patch, pgsql_fdw_v5.patch and
pgsql_fdw_pushdown_v1.patch. My comments are below.
Thanks for the review!
[BUG]
Even though pgsql_fdw tries to push-down
2012/2/2 Marko Kreen mark...@gmail.com:
I think you want this instead:
 https://commitfest.postgresql.org/action/patch_view?id=769
Somehow I've missed this cool feature. Thanks for the suggestion!
--
Shigeru Hanada
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On Tue, Jan 31, 2012 at 8:56 PM, Robert Haas robertmh...@gmail.com wrote:
2012/1/29 Kohei KaiGai kai...@kaigai.gr.jp:
Remote SQL: DECLARE pgsql_fdw_cursor_0 SCROLL CURSOR FOR SELECT
a, b FROM public.t1 WHERE (a 2)
(3 rows)
Shouldn't we be using protocol-level cursors rather than
(2012/02/01 3:56), Robert Haas wrote:
2012/1/29 Kohei KaiGaikai...@kaigai.gr.jp:
Remote SQL: DECLARE pgsql_fdw_cursor_0 SCROLL CURSOR FOR SELECT
a, b FROM public.t1 WHERE (a 2)
(3 rows)
Shouldn't we be using protocol-level cursors rather than SQL-level cursors?
Yes, we should, if
2012/1/29 Kohei KaiGai kai...@kaigai.gr.jp:
Remote SQL: DECLARE pgsql_fdw_cursor_0 SCROLL CURSOR FOR SELECT
a, b FROM public.t1 WHERE (a 2)
(3 rows)
Shouldn't we be using protocol-level cursors rather than SQL-level cursors?
[Design comment]
When BEGIN should be issued on the
Hi Harada-san,
I checked the fdw_helper_funcs_v3.patch, pgsql_fdw_v5.patch and
pgsql_fdw_pushdown_v1.patch. My comments are below.
[BUG]
Even though pgsql_fdw tries to push-down qualifiers being executable
on the remove side at the deparseSql(), it does not remove qualifiers
being pushed down
On 12/14/2011 09:02 AM, Shigeru Hanada wrote:
Here I'd like to propose three incremental patches:
1) fdw_helper_funcs_v3.patch...: This is not specific to pgsql_fdw, but
probably useful for every FDWs which use FDW options...
2) pgsql_fdw_v5.patch: This patch provides simple pgsql_fdw
Tom Lane wrote:
Shigeru Hanada shigeru.han...@gmail.com writes:
(2011/12/12 22:59), Robert Haas wrote:
... I feel like we might need a system here that
allows for more explicit user control about what to push down vs.
not,
rather than assuming we'll be able to figure it out behind the
scenes.
On 13.12.2011 11:57, Albe Laurenz wrote:
Tom Lane wrote:
Shigeru Hanadashigeru.han...@gmail.com writes:
(2011/12/12 22:59), Robert Haas wrote:
... I feel like we might need a system here that
allows for more explicit user control about what to push down vs.
not,
rather than assuming we'll
(2011/12/13 20:04), Heikki Linnakangas wrote:
The SQL/MED spec handles this with the concept of routine mappings.
There is syntax for defining which remote routines, meaning functions,
correspond local functions:
CREATE ROUTINE MAPPING routine mapping name FOR specific routine
designator
(2011/12/13 18:57), Albe Laurenz wrote:
Maybe I'm missing something, but if pushdown worked as follows:
- Push down only system functions and operators on system types.
- Only push down what is guaranteed to work.
Oh, I didn't care whether system data types. Indeed user defined types
would
On Wed, Dec 7, 2011 at 2:34 AM, Shigeru Hanada shigeru.han...@gmail.com wrote:
Sorry for delayed response.
2011/11/29 Albe Laurenz laurenz.a...@wien.gv.at:
I think that this is not always safe even from PostgreSQL to PostgreSQL.
If two databases have different collation, on strings will
(2011/12/12 22:59), Robert Haas wrote:
It does seem like this might not be enough information for the FDW to
make good decisions about pushdown. Even supposing the server on the
other hand is also PostgreSQL, the collation names might not match
(if, say, one is running Windows, and the other,
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